Machina
Mechanical
- Jun 13, 2003
- 17
Hi,
Can anyone recommend a book or other reference that would serve as a guide for using engineering ceramics in mechanical engineering? When I search for ceramic engineering books I seem to find books about how to make them rather than how to use them.
I've often found myself working on designs for machines where some of the properties of ceramics look very attractive but then there may be issues with, for example, tensile loading.
I don't have a specific question and it is mainly to fill in a gap in my knowledge at this time so I don't it'd be sensible to start asking a manufacturer for details; I'd just be asking loads of questions with no strong prospect of a sale and be wasting there time at this stage. But I'll happily consider any recommendations from a manufacturer.
I've come across terms such as Weibull Modulus and am starting to get to grips with that side of things but a good reference book would be really helpful. I'm a fairly experienced engineer so the book doesn't need to cover the engineering basics (but it never hurts to go over them again) but would need to be quite introductory with regard to ceramics.
Any help will be appreciated.
Can anyone recommend a book or other reference that would serve as a guide for using engineering ceramics in mechanical engineering? When I search for ceramic engineering books I seem to find books about how to make them rather than how to use them.
I've often found myself working on designs for machines where some of the properties of ceramics look very attractive but then there may be issues with, for example, tensile loading.
I don't have a specific question and it is mainly to fill in a gap in my knowledge at this time so I don't it'd be sensible to start asking a manufacturer for details; I'd just be asking loads of questions with no strong prospect of a sale and be wasting there time at this stage. But I'll happily consider any recommendations from a manufacturer.
I've come across terms such as Weibull Modulus and am starting to get to grips with that side of things but a good reference book would be really helpful. I'm a fairly experienced engineer so the book doesn't need to cover the engineering basics (but it never hurts to go over them again) but would need to be quite introductory with regard to ceramics.
Any help will be appreciated.